"The idea is to impart plants with functions that are non-native to them."

And with that quote, I just had to post this article on my blog. It is as if someone had read my story and then transferred aspects of it into a real-world situation.

Another quote: "The MIT team is working on creating plants with even more exotic functions. For example, by using magnetic nanoparticles, it is possible they could turn plants into communications antennas."

Wow.

The concept of nanobionics (mixture of plant biology and nanotechnology), as envisaged by scientists at MIT, is to give plants new powers by placing carbon nanotubes in their chloroplasts.

Here is the full article from the LA Times:

"Plants are an engineering marvel of nature. Fuelled by sunlight, they recycle our carbon dioxide waste into fresh oxygen for us to breathe. Plus, they make the world prettier. But, with a little help from us humans, can they be coaxed to do even more?

Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have been experimenting with giving plants new powers by placing carbon nanotubes in their chloroplasts - the tiny engine of the plant cell where photosynthesis takes place.

After much trial and error, their efforts have succeeded. Some of the altered plants produced in the lab have increased their photosynthetic activity by 30 per cent compared with regular plants. Others were able to detect tiny traces of pollutants in the air. And that's just the beginning.

"The idea is to impart plants with functions that are non-native to them," said Michael Strano, a professor of chemical engineering who oversaw the experiments.

In other words, he wants to give plants super powers.

Professor Strano's lab is the first to work at the nexus of plant biology and nanotechnology - a new field dubbed "nanobionics".

Because no one had explored this area before, the team had to start at the very beginning. That meant figuring out how to get nanotubes into a plant in the first place. In early experiments, they watered the plants with a solution containing nanoparticles, hoping the particles would be taken up through the roots. But that didn't work. It turns out plant roots have a structure that blocks nanotubes from entering the vascular system.

The team also tried cutting leaves and steeping them in the nanoparticle solution. That didn't work either.

Undeterred, Professor Strano's team turned to the stomata, the small pores on the underside of leaves that let carbon dioxide in and oxygen and water out. The researchers found that if they put the nanoparticle solution in a syringe and at high pressures shot it at the stomata, the nanotubes would get in.

The next challenge was to get the nanotubes to their intended destination - the tiny chloroplasts, five to 10 microns in length, floating inside the cells. To do this, the team invented a new system that wraps nanoparticles in a highly charged polymer. The polymer is especially attracted to the lipid bubble that surrounds each chloroplast. When the nanotubes hit the bubble, they slide right in.

"It is really impressive how well it worked," said Juan Pablo Giraldo, a plant biologist who works in Professor Strano's lab. The nanotubes "go right in there and start assembling inside".

After the delivery system was established, the researchers could proceed. They used chloroplasts in living plants as well as those extracted from plant leaves, often spinach purchased at the supermarket.

Plants only use 10 per cent of the sunlight available to them. All green light, for example, is reflected by the leaves. But after feeding the nanotubes to living plants, their photosynthetic activity increased by 30 per cent. The technique worked even better on extracted chloroplasts (the kind they got from spinach), causing their photosynthetic activity to increase by 49 per cent.

The MIT team is working on creating plants with even more exotic functions. For example, by using magnetic nanoparticles, it is possible they could turn plants into communications antennas.

"The main vision we have is to use the unique features that plants have - the ability to rebuild themselves, capture solar energy to power themselves or capture carbon dioxide - to make devices that have similar properties," said Dr Giraldo, the lead author of a paper about the work published this month in the journal Nature Materials."